124 PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER IN THE WEST 1 0 f i 0 , 1 \ I t ".-'"""'" ->Sf' 4J: .....,...- --- R Fresh and brisk and jaunty. Whistles up a breeze, even on dry land. The cotton knit pullover has a Henley neckline and a VILLAGER@ monogram. . . White, Navy, or Burgundy, with edging of a different color. S,M,L. The skirt is firm and jaunty Navy cotton denim, stitched in scallops, with a contoured belt. Sizes 6 to 16. Pullover about six dollars, skirt about twelve dollars at good stores and college shops -::J ...... 1407 Broadway, New York 10018 @ THE VILLAGER, INC., 1i66, MANNEQUIN DES. REG. U.S. PAT OFF. would rely on his own impressions. If he liked a boy, he would admit him, and then ask the parents what they could pay. This was not a rarity. The academy's treasurers and bookkeepers have never been able to establish a fig- ure for expectable tuition money for an approaching year. He has over a hun- dred boys there now whose parents have been told to "pay what you can." In 1923, one of hIs students spent the sumnler working in Georgia and made two friends whom he thought Deerfield could help. He wrote to the headmas- ter, who developed an interest and ad- mitted them sight unseen, paying their train fare, forgetting tuition, and buy- ing thenl second-hand suits when they arrived. In some eras, his admissions policies have seemed a little cranky. He refused to admit English boys for many } ears, and he went through a period when he would take no one at al1 from Boston. Local girls continued to at- tend the academy untIl 1948. Then he closed them out. He discnmlnates against no one else, including wealthy people, whose money he eagerly seeks, not caring whether it is new, mellow- ing, or antique. He responds quickly to an applicant who is an athlete. He is also Interested in one-year boys, who need either added maturity or extra- course work before going on to college. He has fewer places for them than many schools have, but in the highly organized patterns of Deerfield those who are admitted readily become a part of the whole, and, in some cases, the one year can be as permanently valu- able to them as three or four years might have been. Since some of these one-year boys have an embarrassing tendency to score more touchdowns, points, runs, and gOdls than anybody else, the headmaster has been accused of prejudice in their favor. The head- nlaster will follow his impulse when a situation comes up that appeals to him or seems to hold promise. In September, 1955, he got a telephone call from a boy in Saddlestring, Wyoming, who said that he wanted to go to Deerfield because he wanted to try for Princeton and did not think he was going to make it from Saddlestring. His father, he ex- plained, had refused to underwrite an) part of his plan, so he could pa} no tui- tIon at all, but he had heard that Mr. Boyden sometimes overlooked tuitIon, and would he please let him come to the school that fall. Schoo] would open in two weeks, and every place was, of course, full "Oh, sure," said the head- master. "Come right ahead." The boy eventually did go to Princeton, was elected to F hi Beta Kappa, and became MARCH 19, 19(,(, ^"^" ^ ^. ... :" d' , . f f ,l-, J " ' ',,." "'!i <1 , y '.... '* , , , \ :: .Þ " ,?. ' :ö:i '. y , W, - <::'" :: ..-:-. .q :':'. '.. , . .;>1' :-:.' , . TORN APART over your vacation? Try the Arlington. It's a great place to put yourself back to- gether. A stay at the Arlington will bring out the "new you". You will enjoy our free enter- tainment program and world- famous Thermal Baths. EDGAR A. MA Y, Manager Phone Area 501-NA 3-7771 '" THE ARLINGTON HOTEL FOUNTAIN PLACE Hot Springs Nat'l Park, Arkansas Easter ýlory "<,:, ' '" ; ,', "..".. .... . j...../. , "" ; J ":! ' ' SParkling as tbe sun on Easter morning gem-ltke rbinestones form a cross and an unusual setting raises it bigh 1ittittgly boxed in soft grey velvet no gift could be more appropriate. $5 WEISS ALBERT WEISS & CO INC, 15 WEST 37TH STREET NEW YORK CITY